Biography
Born on 7 September 1914 in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, Bell began the 1940s performing on piano alongside his trumpet-playing brother Roger Bell in several local jazz ensembles. Beyond his own performances, he ranked among Australia’s foremost advocates for the genre and played a decisive role in cultivating a national audience for it. Toward the close of that decade he transported his ensemble to Britain, where audiences responded warmly, in part because he actively urged younger listeners onto the dance floor. At the decade’s end he launched the independent Swaggie label; thereafter, throughout the 1950s, he led the group on a series of international engagements. He also arranged visits by leading American players, including Rex Stewart, and joined the cornetist for a 1949 broadcast that later appeared on disc. His advocacy persisted undiminished through the 1970s and into the early 1980s, expressed both in continued performances and in a range of organizational efforts. The ensembles he directed favored a straightforward, unadorned approach and featured buoyant, high-spirited players such as Ade Monsbourgh, John Sangster and Dave Dallwitz. Like England’s Chris Barber, Bell refused to limit himself to literal recreations of earlier recordings; instead he imparted a personal imprint through skilled composition and arrangement that remained faithful to the conventions of the traditional jazz band.
Albums

